Beijing has been swamped for days in a beige-gray miasma of smog, bringing coughs and rasping, hospitals crowded from respiratory ailments, a midday sky so dim that it could pass for night and head-shaking disgust from residents who had hoped the city was over the worst of its chronic pollution.
Brother Nut, a performance artist, has something solid to show from the acrid soup in the air: a brick of condensed pollution.
For 100 days, Brother Nut dragged a roaring, industrial-strength vacuum cleaner around the Chinese capital’s landmarks, sucking up dust from the atmosphere. He has mixed the accumulated gray gunk with red clay to create a small, but potent symbol of the city’s air problems.
Photo: Bloomberg
“Dust represents the side-effects of humankind’s development, including smog and building-site dust,” he said in an interview on Tuesday. “When I first arrived in Beijing, I wore a hygiene mask for a few days, but later I stopped. In smog like this, there’s no escaping.”
Reports in Chinese news media about his “Project Dust” have coincided with the worst smog in more than a year across northern China, and Brother Nut — Jianguo Xiongdi (堅果兄弟) in Mandarin, as he insists on calling himself — has catapulted to instant fame in the city, where people talk about ups and downs in PM2.5 air pollution — airborne particles measuring 2.5 micrometers or less — with the sort of familiarity that the English reputedly discuss rainfall.
“Nearly everyone in Beijing would have a brick in their stomachs. Older people, maybe five,” said one of more than 4,000 often-rueful comments on an online gallery of Brother Nut’s project.
“If all of the dust in Beijing was collected together, it would be enough to build the world’s biggest environmental protection bureau,” another said.
The wave of smog across northern China arrived shortly before Monday’s start of negotiations in Paris, where governments hope to settle on a new agreement aimed at reducing greenhouse gas pollution. Much of that smog originates from the coal-fired boilers, vehicle exhausts and industrial plants that pump out carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas.
Brother Nut, 34, smirked at suggestions that he might become a spokesman for efforts to clean up the environment.
His intention was philosophical, he said.
“What I’ve done is like Sisyphus rolling his giant stone,” he said. “There’s no use, but it can make more people think about this issue. It’s a spiritual thing.”
Even without Brother Nut’s inspiration, many people in Beijing and other smog-afflicted cities have been upset about the latest inundation.
The Chinese government has promised to clean up pollution, especially PM2.5, tiny particles that can cause respiratory illness and other health problems. For much of this year, the air across Beijing and other cities has been cleaner, perhaps also partly because of a slowdown in industrial production.
However, the new onslaught of smog has brought complaints from residents that local governments in Beijing and other cities were complacent and ill-prepared for the pollution buildup in static winter air. The capital issued an “orange alert” — the second-highest pollution warning — for the first time since February last year.
“The Beijing City Government’s insufficient alerting system has compounded the problem,” Greenpeace East Asia worker Dong Liansai (董連賽) said in an e-mail.
Brother Nut said he was no expert on PM2.5 pollution or its ill effects.
Feeling inspired to do something about the air quality, he bought a vacuum cleaner with rechargeable batteries and started roaming the city with it in July. He dragged the machine close to Tiananmen Square, the National Center for the Performing Arts, the China Central Television tower and other landmarks.
In the usually security-sensitive city, the police were sometimes curious, but he was not stopped, he said.
Some onlookers failed to fathom his artistic purpose and mistook him for a high-tech street sweeper, he said.
“Some people thought: ‘Wow, Beijing’s really awesome,’” he said. “‘Now they’ve got air cleaners like this.’ They asked me how much money I made. Some thought I was selling vacuum cleaners.”
He also encountered a real street sweeper and “he asked me to vacuum a bit, and I did,” he said.
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